List of HIT Grant Recipients under ARRA

For more up-to-date information about ARRA grants related to EHRs, see the page titled “Grants” which can be found at the top of this blog’s home page. 

A complete listing of the Health Information Exchange (HIEs), Regional Extention Centers (RECs) and job training recipients of HIT grants under the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (“HITECH”) of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (“ARRA”) is available through the HHS Newsroom webpage here.  To date, 40 state agencies, 32 RIEs, and 55 job training participants have received awards totaling over $1 billion.

Conversion to electronic health record and retention of paper records

Editor’s Note: Due to the continued popularity of this post, this article was reviewed and updated on September 30, 2013. For the later version, click here.

Update: On August 8, 2010, Medicare issued MLN Matters Article SE1022 on Medical Record Retention and Media Formats for Medical Records, which states that the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) requires records of providers submitting cost reports (most hospitals) to be retained in their original or legally reproduced form (which may be electronic), for at least 5 years after closure of the cost report.

Many hospitals have electronic health records (EHRs) that are hybrid digital records. While the hospital may be using electronic data entry in the ER, inpatient nursing care, pharmacy, lab, and pre-op anesthesia, oftentimes, these EHRs are not integrated and, thus, are not merged into a single EHR. The short-term solution may have been to scan printed records from some department, like lab or pharmacy, into the patient’s on-line digital record. As a result, the hospital’s “electronic health record” contains information that is not captured in a “coded format.”  For one, this will not meet the Stage One “meaningful use” criteria under the HITECH Act.

But let’s assume that the hospital can overcome this hurdle by working with vendors to integrate these records in a way that will meet HITECH EHR certification standards.  If the hospital has been maintaining certain portions of patient records in a paper format, what does it do with those paper records after converting to an EHR?   If the hospital scans all the paper patient records into its EHR, how long should the hospital retain the paper record after it is scanned into their EHR? 

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Kentucky joins 13 other states with CMS grants for EHR implementation

On Thursday, January 21, 2010, CMS announced that Alaska, Kentucky, South Carolina and Wisconsin, would receive federal matching funds for EHR implementation under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA).  Kentucky’s grant is $2.6 million.  CMS indicated that the grant will be used to study EHR implementation activities in the state, to establish the state’s Medicaid HIT incentive program, and to evaluate provider eligibility for the Medicaid incentive funds under the HITECH Act, which was part of ARRA.  CMS has now made EHR grants to 14 states: Alaska, California, Georgia, Idaho, Iowa, Kentucky, Montana, New York, South Carolina, Texas, U.S. Virgin Islands, Tennessee, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin.

Although the HITECH Act allows states to use federal matching funds to establish EHR loan programs for providers who need this avenue of support, there was no mention that the grant money would be used for that purpose.  This could leave some professionals who have a low or non-existant Medicare patient base and an insufficient Medicaid patient base to qualify for the Medicaid EHR incentives (e.g., some pediatricians), without access to EHR stimulus funds under ARRA.

To read the CMS press release on Kentucky’s grant, go here.  Information for this story also was gathered from Healthcare IT News and HealthImaging.com.

Event in Louisville, KY to focus on “Meaningful Use” under HITECH

On January 19, 2010, the Greater Louisville Health Enterprises Network together with Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society, Bluegrass Chapter, will present a panel presentation with discussions surrounding the next steps under the Health Information Technology for Clinical and Economic Health Act (HITECH), part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) of 2009.

Expert panelists include:

  • Rick Chapman, CIO, Kindred Healthcare & Member, HITSP Panel
  • Kathie McDonald-McClure, Esq., Wyatt Tarrant & Combs, LLP
  • Joe DeVenuto, CIO, Norton Healthcare

Moderated by Greg Aaron, Past Chapter President Bluegrass HIMSS and Board Member, Health Enterprises Network

Time & Location:

  • 5:30 – 6:00 p.m.  Wine Reception.
  • 6:00 – 7:30 p.m. Dinner & Panel Discussion
  • Sheraton Louisville, Riverside, 700 West Riverside Dr., Jeffersonville, IN 47130

Registration Information: $35 members; Tables available $245

To learn more about the Health Enterprises Network, click here.

HHS Releases Proposed EHR “Meaningful Use” Standards

By 2014, hospitals and physicians whom Medicare reimburses for services and items will need to have adopted an electronic health record (EHR) according to rules promulgated under the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health Act (HITECH) or risk reductions in their Medicare reimbursement. On December 30, 2009, the Office of National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid (CMS), under the auspices of the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services (HHS), released their respective proposed rules for qualifying for EHR stimulus funds under HITECH: The “meaningful use” and “certified” EHR standards. 

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